Skip to: Content
Skip to: Site Navigation
Skip to: Search

  • Advertisements

Horizons

Review round-up: Amazon Kindle 2

(Page 2 of 2)



An iPod for books?

Skip to next paragraph

Recent posts

If one device does become the iPod of books, it's likely to be the iPod itself. Last week, Google announced a version of its Book Search that's compatible with the iPhone and iPod touch and gives users access to more than 1.5 million public-domain books. And another application, Lexcycle's Stanza, has been downloaded at least 365,000 times, according to October reports.
And unlike most other mobile devices that have been populated with free content and applications from communities of developers, Kindle 2 makes a steep demand of new users: that they pay up for more. Says Citigroup analyst Mark Mahaney: "It's the gift that keeps on asking." [via BusinessWeek]

The last word

Before they address the needs of some hypothetical super weakling who has the aesthetic sense of [Apple designer] Jon Ive, the cerebral voracity of Rain Man and the vision of Mr. Magoo, Amazon must address the needs of very real readers who read only a few books and magazines at a time, who like to download classic non-copyrighted lit and work-related documents for free, and who like to leaf through pages randomly. This last thing is important, though it may be insurmountable: Airport-friendly page turners don't really require non-linear random-access reading, but everything smart from Harry Potter to Infinite Jest does, and that's one concern that the Kindle, or any ebook reader, still does not address well. [via Gizmodo]

For now, we still see the Kindle as an expensive toy for reading enthusiasts, frequent travelers, and gadget lovers -- and not yet a mainstream device. Today's improvements will make new Kindle buyers happier than they'd be with the old one. But they alone won't do much to dramatically drive adoption. [via Silicon Alley Insider]

It's quicker. The text-to-speech option is terrific. If you're in a car you can put on earphones. It is a little bit like a GPS voice – you know, the navigation in your car. But it's got a lot of kind of nice features. Also it doesn't slide out of the carrying case anymore. One of the things that interested me about it was, clearly the people who do this gadget listened to people when they bitched about what was wrong and they fixed most of it. [author Stephen King for USA Today]

E-mail

Read Comments

View reader comments | Comment on this story

Photos of the day

05.27.12 »

Editors' Picks:

What happens when ordinary people decide to pay it forward? Extraordinary change. See how individuals are making a difference...

Pastor Jean Enock Joseph (c.) visits one of his projects in Croix-des-Bouquets, just outside Port-au-Prince, Haiti’s capital.

Jean Enock Joseph teaches self-help to lift Haiti

Pastor Jean Enock Joseph doesn't shy from Haiti's toughest problems. His message: Haitians have the ability to help themselves.

Become a fan! Follow us! YouTube Link up with us! See our feeds!